I have this XUL application that comes with my GPS device (a
tomtom go 920), which I run on a macosx box. So far so good,
I appreciate their usage of opensource platforms.

However, when I try to use it to update my maps and access a
web server over https, I get a certificate error from the
application (this is really a mozilla certificate error
popup), because it seems that there is no CA installed with
it, or that it doesn't use the system-wide certs.

My question: does anybody know how I could install such a
certificate in this application? the file layout really
looks like the standard mozilla profile layout.

Just did something painful: decided to potentially kill an
open-source project
I've been working on for some years now. Not enough time and
the fact that I'm not a user of my own project anymore: I've
been trying to introduce new features from time to time,
mostly things I fancied. But the fact is: if you don't
scratch your own itches, it's hard to put in enough efforts
to turn a proof of concept into a product.

Just started reading the D Programming
Language website. Looks too good to be true: efficient
language with high level constructs, native support for
unittests and design by contracts, direct access to native C
APIs... Has anybody here used it for something larger than a
toy project, and would like to share his experience?

Pfewww, I really pushed hard to get a new version of Pybliographer out of the door. I'm still amazed at how much one can do alone when using the proper tools. In this case, the proper tool is Python.

Context: my pet project is a bibliography management tool. Its purpose is to help you organise references, search for new material on external databases, help you cite these references in documents,... I've been able to integrate my code with OpenOffice (thanks PyUNO), with LyX (I won't thanks unix pipes on this one), define a proper citation mini-language, put a GUI around part of it (thanks PyGTK) and test some parts of it (thanks, dogtail), send queries to PubMed, Web of Science, CrossRef (thanks Twisted), parse their results (thanks ElementTree), and even package the whole easily (thanks setuptools)!

A while ago, I said that the purpose of pyblio was not to replace tools like EndNote and the like. Maybe I should revise this. Areas where I'd like to push involve reference sharing and fulltext management. I've already a few ideas, but I need to see if the recent features help the project get more traction.

(thanks to the contributors that brought my diary score almost at 3 :-))

Instead of simply documenting how to use pyblio, I've started working on simple demo code that actually use the framework, and are also immediately useful. The first one is an online PubMed to BibTeX converter. Maybe this will help people start using it.